Not a seat empty: Desiderio fulfills dream despite bridesmaid finish

This writer had covered two final UAAP play dates in the men’s basketball regular season pitting the University of the Philippines (UP) Fighting Maroons—the infamous winless season of 2007 at the Ninoy Aquino Stadium and the 1-13 season in 2014. Both games were played against Adamson University. Both in front of near empty UP galleries comprised of mainly pep squad members and cheerleading class enrolees.

For the graduating Maroons in those games, it was a saddest send-off, winding up their UAAP careers virtually with an audience of one.

Paul Desiderio was part of the dark days of 2014 to 2015 as an up-and-coming star whose talent seemingly having gone to waste for playing for a basket case. But he did not let the mockery get the better of him.

“He is not only a coach on the court, but more off the court. He thought us to be better persons, not just better players,” said Diego Dario, the pint-sized spitfire who gave way to Desiderio’s best friend Jun Manzo as the starting point guard.

True enough, the Maroons’ team captain in the early ‘90s assembled a huddle after the loss worth of a sports flick.

“I do not want you to look down,” Perasol pepped in the huddle. “You need to be proud of yourselves. We were in the finals, nobody expected us to be here. You’ve achieved so much, you’ve sacrificed so much, that’s why they’re here (pointing at the UP crowd). So do not look down. We will be better!”

Final wave

Perasol then instructed the five graduating Maroons—Desiderio, Vito, Dario, Jarell Lim and JJ Espanola—to face the crowd and have their final wave of goodbye. It was one of those rare moments when the losing side had the louder cheer, obscuring the Ateneo crowd, who are much used to winning basketball championships.

Indeed, even the best film directors could not script the ending of the five players’ careers, even if they failed to win a championship. But they know their role—as spark of a revolution to be waged by a better squad in the very near future.

“As seniors, we started something. For the one’s we’ll leave behind, we want them to achieve higher,” Dario concluded on behalf of the seniors, a post script to their well-played collegiate careers.